No Nigerian bank is owing MTN, other telcos, says Herbert Wigwe

By Emeka Nze

Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Access Bank Plc, Herbert Wigwe, has said no Nigerian bank is indebted to MTN Nigeria and other phone companies for using telecommunication platforms to provide payment services.

He made this clarification during an investor call in Lagos on Thursday when he said, “There is no such thing as an obligation due from banks to telcos”, adding “We chose not to make a public statement out of it because it is not appropriate for us to be found fighting with telcos in public”.

Wigwe is the head of a team of bank CEOs that has been in discussion with MTN Nigeria to resolve a dispute that led some banks to cut off the company from their banking platforms last week. This was after MTN, the West African nation’s biggest telecom services provider, reduced a commission charged on airtime purchases through banking channels by almost half to 2.5%.

The action against MTN was an escalation of an ongoing dispute between lenders and telcos in Africa’s largest economy over fees chargeable on services carried out on each others’ platforms. Telecom operators through their umbrella union, the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria, threatened last month to disconnect banks from providing payment services on telco platforms until they paid a 42 billion naira ($103 million) debt allegedly due to its members from end-user billing.

The threat was called off after the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy intervened in the dispute leading to an agreement to charge a fixed amount and also settle any indebtedness for past services.

The telecom companies are asking the banks to remit money to them even for transactions that did not take place, Wigwe said. “It is true that they continue to provide this service but this service has nothing to do with the banks,” he said.

Access Bank’s transactions value on telco platforms more than doubled to 1.9 trillion naira in 2020 from 891 billion naira a year earlier, according to an emailed presentation. The volume of transactions rose 80% to 590 million as more customers adopted the technology for payments.

-Bloomberg